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11 votes
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Margaret Atwood TERF Twitter controversy
7 votes -
Kurt Vonnegut: Unstuck in Time | Official trailer
5 votes -
I left poverty after writing 'Maid.' But poverty never left me
6 votes -
A story about living in nature and the value of culture captures the spirit of Finland – Lizzie Enfield explores the remarkable legacy of 'Seitsemän veljestä'
9 votes -
Denmark now has two Little Mermaids. The famous one is suing.
7 votes -
How Twitter can ruin a life: The story of Isabel Fall
19 votes -
Kristen Roupenian’s viral story draws specific details from my own life. I’ve spent the years since it published wondering: How did she know?
10 votes -
William Gibson says today's internet is nothing like what he envisioned
10 votes -
Nawal El Saadawi, Egyptian author and women’s rights icon, dies
7 votes -
HG Wells fans spot numerous errors on Royal Mint's new £2 coin
9 votes -
Explore Indigenous futurisms with these science fiction and fantasy books by indigenous authors
8 votes -
Legendary science fiction author Ben Bova has passed at the age of 88, due to Covid
10 votes -
Alan Dean Foster—author of novelizations of Star Wars: A New Hope, the Alien franchise, and more—says that Disney has not paid any royalties since acquiring the rights to his books
20 votes -
Harlan Ellison's The Last Dangerous Visions may finally be published, after five-decade wait
7 votes -
Pippi and the Moomins - the antics in postwar Nordic children’s books left propaganda and prudery behind. We need this madcap spirit more than ever.
15 votes -
Louise Glück wins Nobel Prize for Literature
6 votes -
Judith Butler on the culture wars, JK Rowling and living in “anti-intellectual times”
5 votes -
Thomas Frank on the podcast "Useful Idiots"
3 votes -
CBS Studios has struck a global first-look deal for an adaptation of Ragnar Jónasson's best-selling nordic-noir book The Darkness
5 votes -
JK Rowling’s latest book is about a murderous cis man who dresses as a woman to kill his victims
39 votes -
Ocean Vuong joins Margaret Atwood, David Mitchell and Karl Ove Knausgård to lock away work in the Future Library to be published in ninety-four years time
10 votes -
John Boyne accidentally includes Zelda video game monsters in novel
12 votes -
Brandon Sanderson: 'After a dozen rejected novels, you think maybe this isn’t for you'
9 votes -
Stephen Colbert interviews Mary Trump on her new book
4 votes -
Signs you're a Black character written by a White author
23 votes -
Frog and Toad (and me)
13 votes -
How Ayn Rand ruined my childhood
21 votes -
Remembrance - Emily Bronte
5 votes -
The weight of James Arthur Baldwin
7 votes -
Is anyone else a Neil Postman fan?
I eventually recommend Neil Postman's writing to anyone I can. These books are absolutely fantastic, especially Technopoly, though I'd also recommend Amusing Ourselves to Death and The End of...
I eventually recommend Neil Postman's writing to anyone I can. These books are absolutely fantastic, especially Technopoly, though I'd also recommend Amusing Ourselves to Death and The End of Education (pun in the title intended).
One of Neil Postman's big contributions to how I think was by explaining an extended notion of the Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis. Instead of trying to insist that different human languages have different ways of communication, Neil Postman makes the assertion that different media, books, oral communication, TV, radio, the internet, have world-views embedded into them. So, you will (almost) never find a serious philosophical discussion in a film. Books, being linear can afford to give a cursory examination, and the person reading can follow at their own pace, while film can't do that. However, films are better at communicating emotion, so the stories in film are more experience/emotion/in-the-moment driven. Postman's argument was better, so ignore the weaknesses in my summary. I'm just trying to give some flavor to the type of things he wrote, like he also predicted how people would communicate on the internet.
The thing which really stands out to me is how Neil Postman was just a good thinker. He wasn't a one hit wonder for ideas. I'd be willing to read his thoughts on just about anything, even if I disagree. So anyway, read him! You won't have any regerts.
5 votes -
Mermaids writes an open letter to JK Rowling
18 votes -
JK Rowling is dangerously wrong
25 votes -
Daniel Radcliffe responds to JK Rowling's latest tweets about gender identity
12 votes -
Forrest Fenn confirms his treasure has been found
18 votes -
Tracking down all of Isaac Asimov's books
10 votes -
Spend some time down the rabbit hole of author-as-gameshow contestant, from Herman Wouk to John le Carré
3 votes -
Algonquin Round Table: How the group of writers became a symbol of the roaring twenties
4 votes -
The case for Stanislaw Lem
10 votes -
One of Sweden's best-known authors, Per Olov Enquist, has died aged 85
8 votes -
Does JK Rowling’s breathing technique cure the coronavirus? No, it could help spread it
6 votes -
Novelist Arundhati Roy on how coronavirus threatens India — and what the country, and the world, should do next
5 votes -
Why authors are so angry about the Internet Archive’s Emergency Library
10 votes -
Growing up in Quarantineland: Childhood nightmares in the age of germs prepared me for coronavirus
6 votes -
Fiction writers introduction thread!
1. Definition By fiction, I mean: literature in the form of prose, especially short stories and novels, that describes imaginary events and people. (Google) 2. Introduce Yourself! I understand we...
1. Definition
By fiction, I mean:
literature in the form of prose, especially short stories and novels, that describes imaginary events and people. (Google)
2. Introduce Yourself!
I understand we have at least one professional writer in the house (I cannot remember your username, sorry!), and several aspirant writers.
Every once in awhile, I get the urge to suggest some collaborative threads exercises, but it's hard to gauge interest without a better notion of how many fiction writers we have.
With that in mind, I make this call for introductions!
Please try to include:
- Have you ever made money writing fiction?[1]
- First writing language(s): Examples: English, Portuguese, German, etc
- Other writing languages(s): same as above. English is implied.
- Formats* : Examples: Short story, Romance, Play, Screenplay, etc
- Genres*: Examples: horror, science-fiction, fantasy, etc.
- Main themes*: Examples: relationships, violence, artificial intelligence, etc.
- Link to Writing Sample(s) on Tildes or Ghostbin (either as
textormarkdown) - What do you expect to achieve with your writing (anything, either subjective or objective)?[2]
- Apart from ~creative, where do you go for feedback?
- Are you looking for collaborations of any kind? Yes or No.
Footnotes
[1] The purpose of this question is not to assess the quality of your writing, but rather the position writing occupies in your life. Is this something you do in your free time, or does it have a central role among your other activities? I do not pretend to know how and why everyone writes, this is just a starter. Feel free to share as much as you want.
[2] For example: self-expression, philosophical investigation, external appreciation (nothing wrong with that), financial rewards, political or societal change, any combination of those.
* In order of importance
8 votes -
Here’s a list of authors whose tours have been canceled due to coronavirus, if you’d like to support them by buying books
11 votes -
Nedim Yasar, a former gang leader who had turned his back on crime, was shot dead in Copenhagen just as a book about his life was published
6 votes -
James Joyce’s grandson and the death of the stubborn literary executor
7 votes -
Asimov at 100: From epic space operas to rules for robots, the prolific author’s literary legacy endures
9 votes -
Is France still at the center of the French-language literary world? Or, to ask a broader question, is there a center at all?
6 votes